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The Suns of Scorpio

by Kenneth Bulmer

Other authors: See the other authors section.

Series: Dray Prescot (#2 (Delian Cycle)), Delian Cycle (Book 2)

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1664162,883 (3.71)6
The second book of the Dray Prescot series.Slave of the colossus builders or scourge of the Inland Sea? Both roles awaited Dray Prescot on his return to Kregen. Torn between two contending forces, the Star Lords and the Savanti, Prescot himself wanted only to find his beloved, the Princess Delia of the Blue Mountains. But the powers that had drawn him across interstellar space to the world that orbited the red and green suns in the Constellation Scorpio had set him a task, the nature of which even he could not fully comprehend...… (more)
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» See also 6 mentions

Showing 4 of 4
a solid meh. ( )
  aeceyton | May 3, 2021 |
Sword and Planet Fiction at its best. Fast-paced entertaining reads. Rereading this series nearly 50 years after the first book's publication, I was surprised at how well they held up and at the erudition and learning of the author. For "pulp" fiction, the vocabulary is rich and rewarding to logophiles like myself. I purchased the ebook omnibus editions for my reread of the series to facilitate dictionary and web access to definitions and references to 19th century history and the Age of Sail -- since I am a student of history as well. However, this is not necessary for the causal reader who desires only the pleasure of the experience, just as enjoying a delicious meal does not require knowing the precise recipe. The marvelous interior illustrations are the added seasoning (and only present in these original paperback editions). ( )
  Dr_Bob | Jun 29, 2020 |
I can say that without a doubt this series is going to continue to kick ass in the highest fashion possible. Book 2, The Suns of Scorpio retained a lot of the same themes as Transit [Book 1] with a greater emphasis on that most hated theme, Slavery. Dray once again finds himself alive, stark and laying on the beach without a notion as to what is laid before him. He has finally accepted that he is a pawn of the Star Lords / Savanti to bend at their very whim, however in this book he aims to do it with some class and style.

Once again Dray has risen from the very bottom of the barrel to be a notorious and highly praised individual and granted titles and privileges for them to be stripped away at the most paramount moments. Poor Dray cannot catch a break at all. I eagerly look forward to the third installment in this epic series. ( )
  Joseph_Stelmaszek | Nov 29, 2015 |
When Kenneth Bulmer (whose pseudonym Akers was) wrote this second of the Dray Prescott books, he presumably already intended to write at least a few more, if not the dozens that eventually transpired. Evidence for this is in the highly irregular narrative structure of The Suns of Scorpio. It starts out conventionally enough, with hero Prescott's return by mystical transport to the Antarean planet, and his integration into a society and region of Kregen that he hadn't encountered before. In the middle, however, a major section of the story is omitted, on the grounds of loss of some of the cassettes from which the story is supposed to have been transcribed. Also, the story ends on the moment before its narrative climax, as Bulmer is evicted from the planet, presumably back to Earth, but without explanation or epilogue. The "missing tapes" section seems as if it may have been a device to avoid writing an erotic passage without impugning the frankness of Prescott as a memoirist. The ending, however, is clearly part of a slow development of evidence regarding the intentions of the still-mysterious Star Lords and the enigmatic Savanti.

The Suns of Scorpio takes place within a polarized backwater civilization on an inland sea, somewhat isolated from the Kregish political powers of Prescott's prior adventures. The two dominant nations of this part of the planet each worship a different one of the two suns of the Antarean system, and they are locked in a longstanding cool war characterized by sporadic piracy and rapine aimed at client cities. Prescott's experience with more sophisticated Terrestrial technologies of seafaring and warfaring serves him in good stead in this volume.

Even more than in the first book, Prescott's narrative voice emphasizes a wiser-but-sadder reflection on his younger adventures. But like Transit to Scorpio, it is a fast read, and it shows ever-so-incremental progress toward a grander structure that will make sense of these episodes in which Prescott serves as a catalyst for political upheaval. As an extra complication, he is inducted into an initiatory society which furnishes him with superior martial disciplines, and claims his allegiance in circumstances that would require his return to the worshippers of the red sun.
4 vote paradoxosalpha | Dec 2, 2012 |
Showing 4 of 4
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» Add other authors (4 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Kenneth Bulmerprimary authorall editionscalculated
Kirk, TimIllustratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Kirk, TimCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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For Donald A. Wollheim
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Some of the strange and remarkable story of Dray Prescot, which I have by a fortunate chance been privileged to edit, has already seen publication.
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The second book of the Dray Prescot series.Slave of the colossus builders or scourge of the Inland Sea? Both roles awaited Dray Prescot on his return to Kregen. Torn between two contending forces, the Star Lords and the Savanti, Prescot himself wanted only to find his beloved, the Princess Delia of the Blue Mountains. But the powers that had drawn him across interstellar space to the world that orbited the red and green suns in the Constellation Scorpio had set him a task, the nature of which even he could not fully comprehend...

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